THE SUNDAY" OKEGONIAN, PORTLAND, MAT 13, 1917. PULSE OF PUBLIC IS FELT IN COMMENT THROUGH LETTERS j PORT FACILITIES 5EED Portlander Telia Why Seattle Becomes Great Shipping; Center. Kj'UTLAKD, May 12. (To the Ed itor --5t rught to be frankly recor nlzed tTv.it Seattle Is the leading ship ping center today on the Pacific Coast because that city has special storing; and handling facilities, which Portland does not have. So this is a good time to drive home the truth of the argu ments that better shipping facilities and elevators for the handling of bulk grain are desirable If we want to com pete for the world trade again. On a recent visit to the Puget Sound I had occasion to go Into the public waterside terminal facilities of Seat tle, and finding them so well built, modernly equipped and so busy I In vestigated each of the six units and Interviewed leading business men to learn more about the port Improve ments. It ia an interesting Irony that at the outset I should find in the cold storage plant of the Spokane-street unit 250,000 cases of Columbia River salmon and In another room of this same building 250,000 pounds of Columbia River smelt. And the dock superintendent said the only reason the fish were in Seattle was because Portland had no facilities for storing Its own product. It 13 the same with grain shipped In bulk. Portland Is going to vote upon a bond Issue of $3,000,000 for the erec tion of a bulk grain elevator and Im proved shipping facilities on June 4. Seattle already has these improve ments and is enlarging them. I shall try to show how these public' ware houses and docks have been an Impor tant factor in the present prosperity of the Sound city. To quote the words of a prominent banker of Seattle: "It was a good thing shipping forced Itself on us for we needed It." Shipping could not force Itself on Portland, because the Rose City lacked two things harbor terminals and ships. Seattle; had both. It has been said that the Port of Seattle is operating Its municipally owned warehouses, docks and grain elevators at a loss. The figures pre pared by the auditor of the port show that the total revenue for the year 1916 was $391,953,07. The expenses were $258,496.27. Therefore, the Port of Seattle had at the end of the year $133,456.80 over and above the operating expenses. These are official figures. What makes this revenue? Is it the product of the surrounding country or l.i it the shipment of war supplies to Russia? Both. And the Alaska trade a.B well. It was said that shippers would not use the municipally owned docks, cold storage plants, grain elevator and warehouses. They didn't at first. But when they found that goods could be handled cheaper and at less insur ance rates and with greater dispatch, they soon were using every depart ment, until now it is necessary to use the Spokane-street wharves and the Hanford-street dock even before they are completed. This is the truth, for I saw farm tractors, automobiles, clams, brown sugar, canned goods and apples stored in rooms where the con tractors were still working. At the Smith's Cove pier they were loading ships for Russia and Japan; at the Bell-street wharf they were hosting railroad cars and other equip ment on Government transports for the Federal railroad in Alaska; at the Spokane-street dock they were unloading the Yubarl, of the Maru line, of Kobe, which had 11,000,000 pounds of sugar for Montreal, Canada. On this Spokane street dock they handled 50,000,000 pounds of freight in one month. What reason is there for Seattle hav ing this immense trade? Railroads do not have a water grade into the port. Ships do not have a shorter route from the Orient. The city is not nearer the grain centers or farming communities. 'Why is it, then, that Seattle is ship ping as fast as ships can be had, while Portland, with more natural advan tages, sits twiddling its thumbs? The solution is simple improved port facilities. The Port of Seattle has spent $600,000 for a bulk grain eleva tor and last week let a contract for additional circular bins which will in crease the capacity to 1.000,000 bushels of grain. It has spent more than $4,000,000 in terminal units which per mit freight cars to run directly onto the dock and discharge their load into the ship or into the warehouse to await the next vessel. Portland has none of these vet. A PORTLANDER. ENGLISH" LANGUAGE NOT LIKED Call It "United States.' Is SuKgrxtion of P. I. Dekker. PORTLAND. May 12. (To the Ed itor.) A correspondent in Sunday's Oregonian says English Is the univer sal language. very well, let us ac cept it as such, but in accordance with our conclusion, let us change the name of it. If it is composed of elements from a great many other languages, why not as well call it American or United States or Oregonian or some arbitrarily coined name? If English is In such world-wide use, why should we call it by the name applied to but a lew million people on a small island in the North Atantic? True, there is a substratum of Anglo- Baxon words in present-dav Entrlish. This is the least valuable part of the language. How could it be otherwise? The tribes who settled Britain were essentially marauders and pirates. They were ignorant, howling savages fond of fighting, feasting and getting orunK, at a time when a complete civ ilization existed and had existed for many centuries in a large part of the Mediterranean basin. Hence it is easy to understand why Anglo-Saxon serves no other office today than providing names for the most elementary and pri mary tnmgs ana relations of life. Th Anglo-Saxons had not developed the complexities of civilization and the language reflected this fact.. The first influence that converted English from an uncouth tongue into a somewhat civilized speeech was the coming of William the Conqueror, and Norman-French, which was hardly more than a Latin dialect. Since then Anglo-Saxon has become progressively insignincant in English, until nowa days if we wish to describe new objects or express the intricate things of the mind or the nuances of feeling, we must have recourse to Greek and Latin derivatives. English has no genius bucii a. inoueiu uerman nas tor coin ing words from its own roots. There fore the necessity of borrowing fron other languages, except where the mos ordinary commodities or concents are Involved. The scientific and philo sophical vocabulary of English writers would be poor, indeed, if they were dependent on Anglo-Saxon. If English is to become really a world language, two things must hap pen. First, the absurd spelling must be reformed. In place must come a phonetic system. People who use the language will not much longer submit to its Tory domination by the dons of Cambridge and Oxford. Too much time is lost in learning thu irrational Eng lish orthography. Some of the great est scholars, both in this country and Great Britain, favor the reform. Second, the name of the language must be changed. "English" is much too narrow a term. Better call it the Greco-Roman tongue though of course that is too clumsy a compound. Why not rename the language "United States?" We have more inhabitants than all the English-speaking people of the whole British Empire. We print more newspapers, periodicals and books than England. We publish more dic tionaries. We have more schools and colleges that teach the language and as able scholars who study its past and help mold its future. Now we are even going to save Great Britain from being starved. Isn't it about time that this country took the lead instead of always playing the sedulous ape to England in all things literary and scholarly? So, I say either give the Englsh lan guage an entirely new name that is really typical of it that is, its flexi bility and mutability or call it United States." for the future of the language rests with this country any way. PAUL I. DEKKER. P. S. This name is of Dutch, not German origin. MEXICAN LABOR IS ADVOCATED Many Workmen Available Before Japs Are Admitted. REEDSPORT. Or.. May 11. (To the Editor.) I notice that there is consid erable talk of letting the Chinese and Japanese pour into our country. I fear if such were done, it would be a great mistake, which we would repent of at leisure. The Eastern people do not un derstand the problem these people are to us on the Pacific Coast. We have enough of them now. Would it not be better to look about and see what we have at home first? We could take all the Japs and China men doing woman's work in our towns and city and put them out on the farms and let women and girls take their places in towns, which they would be glad to get. Then take the Indians from the res ervations and put them on the farms. They can do an able-bodied man's work in the harvest field, while most Japs and Chinamen are not much at haying time. Then there is lots of the work that can be done by schoolboys, and women and girls can be a big help In fruit and vegetable work, and they are more than willing to help. And last, but not least, why could we not hire Mexi cans to come over here and help us out? We perhaps could get all the labor we wanted there, and they make good. strong workers, handy with horses. knowing how to handle a team which is a big advantage over a Chinaman or Jap (they know nothing about horses). It would be doing the Mexicans a good turn and I believe would help to overcome the hard feeling they may have toward us. We know that they are starving d-wn there. Why not help them in this way? And as a last resort we could do as France is doing, hire Chinamen under contract and return them when through. But do not let down the bars. In a California fruit district a few years ago, they hired Japs and Hindus to pick and dry their fruit, leaving 500 Indians on a reservation remain idle. the mills running to their full capacity for months. The railroads are now blocked with freight- They will have to transport this material, amounting to about 40,000 carloads, and in addition thousands of cars of wheat, flour and other necessities. Tell me, if you will, how they could carry the material re quired for homes that are distant from the lumber manufacturers and at the same time take care of the Govern ment transportation? The needs of the Government in war timese automatically stop, to a great extent, private improvements, but this is not stagnation. The Government is an additional customer and the de mands of the Government for war ma terial will require the labor of every man that is out of employment, no matter what his vocation. If this Ir true, it does not mean industrial stag nation. Tonnage capacity of railroads and ships is going to be taken by the Government to move the material re quired for the Army and Navy, not only to feed them but to carry supplies for their requirements. After that the railroads will Jtake care of the necessi ties required by the public. The Government will not permit the shipment of asphalt and cement to build roads with when this space is re quired for other more necessary ma terial. Carpenters will not build homes because they cannot get the material, but they will build wooden ships and freight cars. Plasterers and brick layers will be employed in steel ship yards, foundries, machine shops, flour mills, etc., with steady employment and Increased wages. This, it seems to me, will create activity; a change, perhaps, in occupation for the period of the war, but this is not stagnation. Is the operation of sawmills, flour mills, shipyards, box factories) machine shops to their full capacity at increased wages industrial stagnation or is it Industrial activity? The East has suf fered like this for nearly three years but they did not call it stagnation. S. B. COBB. CAPITALISM 'IS ON TRIAL has an edge on every one of us when it comes to real service. He is the man who, with little chance for glory none for money, offers to accept cer tain hardship and possible annihila tion for the sake of his flag. His absolute antithesis is the con temptible cur who skulks out of the city to his home on the farm on the theory that he has less chance of being called to war if he does so. When, in addition, the farm in question is al ready so unproductive that it does not' support those already living on it with out their supplementing the income by "working out," he is worse than a mere slacker he is an economic bur den. BRYAN R. DORR. POOR CHILDREN NEED CLOTHES Sugrg-estlona Made to Relieve Families In Distress. BEND. Or., May 11. (To the Ed itor.) While economy is being urged in every home in America, let me sug gest a few things in that line which may be of some help to the poor peo ple who cannot feed a family of chil dren at the present prices without their being far underfed, and -buy clothing, even enough to keep them clean. I think it would be a good plan if every town would get some large empty house or building, one in each district, for the people to come and get what clothing is necessary for them. They know more what they really need than someone else. Summer as well as Winter. The money they would otherwise spend for clothing could buy Jars and fruit and vegeta bles to can. So help those who would help themselves by giving that old peated the story. So did Bancroft. The accuracy of Thornton along other lines was sharply challenged by Mrs. Victor, and perhaps no history of Ore gon is fuller of inaccuracies than Ban croft's. As far as the "divide" story Is concerned they seem to have simply "followed copy." We all understand how carelessly much history is writ ten, and the evidence of pioneers and of "those present," given over 40 years after the event, may well have had its origin in Mrs. Victor's attractive "romance." Nothing is more common than fori actual participants in important events to accept, in later years, with mem ories dimmed by the lapse of time, an inaccurate but attractive narrative as a substitute for what actually occurred. Our every day experiences, our Jury trials in the courts and our text books on mental philosophy furnish abundant proof of this. Any story well told and repeatedly told becomes history. The letter of Dr. Robert Newell quoted by Mr. Elliott, was written in 1866. He was at the Champoeg meet ing and his letter was a recital of what occurred at that meeting. It chal lenged the accuracy of Gray's account. Dr. Newell was, as Mr. Elliott says, "a real leader among the mountain men." He was twice Speaker of the Legisla ture of the Provisional Government, and was a more considerable construc tive factor in his day than was Meek, even if he was not so spectacular. Newell and Meek had been Rocky Mountain trappers together. They came to Oregon together. Meek driving Newell's team. Both located in what is now Washington County. Newell later made his home at Champoeg, and it was there that he wrote the letter that is Quoted bv Mr. Elliott. blanket. Just worn a little in the cen- In this letter he goes into detail, ter, you discarded. It can be covered He says that Dr. Babcock. the chalr- A few people in that district saw the I evil of it and the next fruit season went to the newspapers and asked them to plead with the people to give their work to the Indians who needed it, and who would spend every dollar they earned for foodstuffs and clothing, to keep them over the Winter, while those they hired the year before perhaps spent a dollar or two in that town. and when through the year's work would send the bulk of their earnings across the ocean. The Indians were hired, both men and women, they did their work well and left their money in the stores when ready to return to the reservation. If you find these suggestions reason able I thought perhaps you would know how to get it before the proper people and see if something could not be accomplished in this way. F. C. S. NR. COBB EXPLAINS POSITION Industrial Stagnation, Not Good Roads, Is Opposed. PORTLAND, May 12. (To the Edi tor.) Your editorial, "Mr. Cobb and Stagnation," in answer to my letter of May 5, regarding the issuance of bonds for road building is so much in vari ance with the facts and so likely to be mlsconstruedfelhat I ask the use of your columns for brief reply. Your editorial is based not on facts. but entirely on presumptions; not a strong foundation, to say the least. Using your language for replying to this point. I presume that it afforded the best argument that could be found ,to answer my letter. I wrote my let ter not because I was opposed to good roads but because I did not think it expedient to construct roads at this time. I have always thought that stag nation came from inactivity, that mere ly a change of occupation or a change in the products manufactured would not produce stagnation. Constant em ployment at increased wages, larger demands taking the capacity of indus trial plants does not create stagna tion. but it does make industrial activity. I am a lumber manufacturer and homebuilder, and whether I am opposed to homebuilding or not makes at this time no difference. The number of houses that will be built during the war depends not on what we may say or desire but on our National Govern ment and the transportation companies. None will be built if the Government requires the output of our plants to their capacity. We cannot take orders for houses now because we cannot de liver them. We have several ready for shipment that have lain in our store room for weeks that cannot be deliv ered on account of the car shortage and transportation of material, and men for the Government. This has not produced industrial stagnation in our plant; neither have we stopped the making of fruit boxes but, "on the contrary, have doubled our capacity to try to meet the demand. It is evident, however, that fruitgrow ers and packers will not get suffi cient cases to meet their requirements for packing fruit, neither will they get cans or glass jars, but they will not stop the saving of fruit on this ac count. If they cannot can it they will dry or evaporate It and put It into sacks or other packages, and if re quired by the ' Government they will furnish the boxes from our plant, if necessary; but orchardists will not stop picking their fruit because of lack of cases. There would be no stagna tion with them on account of not re ceiving boxes. Every machinery house in this coun try is months back on delivery of or ders. New machinery cannot be pur chased at the present time at any price on stated delivery.' Old machinery is and will continue to be taken and re paired to take care of the demand on industrial plants that are increasing their capacity on account of the de mand of the Government. Manufactur ers and raw material men have antici pated the Government requirements and have taken their goods temporarily from the market. The purchase of saws a few days ago brought out the fact that it would require at least six months to fill the order because the Government had asked the manufac turer to increase his plant and make plates for steel ships as well as saws. But this will not produce industrial stagnation because they added the mak ing of plates. Industrial stagnation comes, as I have observed, from non-operation, and the product manufactured is not of any consequence so long as the industry is active. The Government is now ask ing for 600,000,000 feet of lumber to provide suitable quarters for barracks, etc., and an addition 1,500,000,000 feet for building ships. If the West Coast only receives one-half of this order, the production of this material will keep Socialisation Deemed One of Results of World War. PORTLAND. May 12. (To the Edi tor. Let it not be considered treason able, but in the order of current events that must come, and allow a true prophet the socialist to speak to the people along with the many false prophets that are now leading into this world conflagration. Writers, statesmen, preachers, poli ticians, all. are alike at sea in de fining the primary causes of this great war. Only socialists have knowledge of the cause and are able to give cur rent expression to rational ideas that will bring the war to a timely end. Their influence is seen and felt in every belligerent country, standing out boldly as the umpire of the war game with advice that will bring a peace that will be permanent and lasting; even the abolition of war as a medi ator of the contentions of mankind. It is they who know that capitalism, in this war, is digging the grave of the final burial that, in the end, must hide its hideous form from the sight of civ lzation that will arise on the ruins of this world catastrophe. Exceeding in magnitude any previous catastrophes is the waste want, suf fering, debt, destruction and misery of this war. Coming, as It does, as the direct fruits of exploitation, being the effect of the cause for which the war is being waged, profit, competition for world markets, that are made neces sary because labor is deprived of that portion of its earning that goes to make up the profits for which the competitive game is being played by capitalist industry. The necessary so cialization, by each belligerent gov ernment, of the productive and trans porting resources, in order that the government may be able successfully to carry on the war. Is the lesson that is being learned by the worker. It is teaching him how to manage the af fairs of government after capitalism has spent its last shot in its own de struction. 0 Labor will - say. after this war is ended and its end wl come through following.- the lead of Russia, in de posing despots, whether they be heads crowned with civil authority or cor porate greed struggling for markets we have learned how to avoid war and how to live the life of human beings, instead of the brute beasts you have made of us in following your capital ist game. We will no longer kill each other that you may make profits from our daily labor. Since you have so cialized these public utilities for the preservation of your private Inter ests, we will continue their socializa tion for our co-operative benefit. You are invited to live with us for the good of all Instead of the few. Let there be no- more private profits and no more wars. We defy your authority, wheth er it be civil or financial, longer to roo us or what we produce. C. W. BARZEE. SLACKER ON FARM REBUKED Some Declared to Avoid Duty by Pre tending to Produce Food. DORR, Wash., May 11. (To the Edi tor.) The most detestable coward in the world is the hypocrite who tries to conceal his cowardice behind a mask of duty. I refer to the young bachelor without dependents who leaves a city Job to go home to the old folks on the farm so that he can sneak off to the cornfield or the potato patch and hide when the census taker comes along and will make a good quilt. It will save cotton or wool. If it is white it can be made into underskirts for school girls and would be warm, too. Or it can be made into small children's night gowns, under waists and so on. Sheets the same. If worn in the middle, each end can be made into a skirt for Sum mer. More muslin on children in Sum mer and blankets in Winter will save lots of little lives. Don't throw away or burn those nightgowns, whether cotton flannel or muslin. You only wore them out in part. The bottom will make a skirt or something for some little waif. Your gingham dresses will make a little apron for some baby. That old street dress, too, is good enough for some dear boy or girl to wear to Sunday school. He or she would be proud of it and so would you. Or take some poor little chap or lassie home and make over everything you can for it out of your old duds. Have It stay for dinner, too, and the happier it 'gets the happier you will be. And dear little babies! Don't forget the hot days and nights. One would enjoy that old crib, little bed or car riage. With the ends of those sheets Its sleep would be unbroken. People care for such In Winter to keep them warm. Help the little ones live through the Summer; it is more impor tant than Winter to the tiny ones. So save the children by proper clothing and cleanliness this Summer out of your scrap heap. It can be done. MRS. CHARLES A. POTTER. I PATRIOTIC SUPPORT IS URGED Sailor In Manila Praises Portland's Spirit, bat Advises Action. U. S. S. GALVESTON. Manila. P. I.. April 8. (To the Edior.) I will start by saying I shall never forget the morning I sailed up the Columbia and then the Willamette River and arrived at Portland on board the Naval Militia training ship U. S. S. Marblehead. We secured at the foot of Jefferson street and the "welcome" we received was one not easily forgotten. During my stay, which was only a few short weeks, I met and made many friends, and I enjoyed myself immensely as did my shipmates, as there are innumer able places of interest. During the Rose Festival and Fourth of July celebration we sailors seemed to be welcome wherever we chose to go. and above all Portland is the most patriotic town that an American man-o'-war ever dropped anchor at. During those great celebrations I don't think a person could have found a single home or building that was not topped by the American ensign. Old Glory. Did it ever occur to you Just what the Stars and Stripes mean? It stands for the greatest thing ever, "a self-made nation." And now that the time has come when this Nation must preserve her rights, why shouldn't she receive the help? Now is the time when the young American can come to the front again and prove that there is nothing greater than "serving his country." I left the U. S. S. Marblehead at Sitka. Alaska, returned to San Francisco on board the U. S. S. Oregon, and August 5 I was on my way to the Philippine Islands. I arrived here September 2 after man, after twice taking an aye and nay vote, declared he could not tell which side was in the majority, and that he, Babcock, then asked those present to line up on opposite sides. Not a word is said about Meek's ask ing for a divide, but he says "there was much pulling and hauling," and that it was about half an hour before the tellers could report the result. It is probable that in the course of the wrangle not only Meek, but a dozen others, called for a divide. Suppose we compromise on the prop osition that everybody was for a di vide, and let it go at that. Nobody cares to strip Colonel Meek of any of his laurels, but there is a protest against exalting any one man over hundreds of others of the early build ers of the state who were entitled to equal, if not greater credit, for the really constructive work of the old pioneer days. PIONEER. ATTACK ON PURITY CRITICISED Mr. Daly Taken to Task for Stand About Opponent. PORTLAND! May 12. (To the Edi tor.) A writer, evidently Mr. Daly himself or some one taking his dicta tion, has been touting Mr. Daly's cam paign in the Journal through numer ous letters, and from their tenor one can see that Mr. Daly is the Ultima Thule of perfection, and the most de sirable and best equipped, mentally, morally and mathematically, of all the candidates now before the voters for the position of Mayor. The fact that Mr. Daly is not pro ficient mathematically, as evidenced in the discrepancy between his esti mate of the cost of the water system he advocates and that of three expert engineers, is overlooked; his juggling with the truth in his statement that he was too busy serving the city to attend a ball game, notwithstanding his at tendance there, is ignored, and voters are assumed to be so obtuse thai nnrh buncombe can mislead them. I have not the pleasure of Mr. Daly's acquaintance personally, but I am willinc to nut myself on record by stating that he Is a nine man. Physically he may weigh a ton, yet he is little. This is shown in his reference to one of his opponents as "purity" Warren. In my youth I was taught that puritv was something to be desired. "Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see juu, was one or the verbal gems that leu irom me lips or Jesus in that mem urauie sermon on the mountain. "Be ye pure as your Father in heaven is pure, ne cnarged his disciples. nave oaDDiea sofewhat In the filthy pool of politics; I have heard a man's past and all the vile acts of his immediate and remote relatives iic-ah against him. but Mr. Daly Is the first man to allege that the purity of a man's character disqualifies him for .UUiiw uuiie. tt. A. CHILDERS. as to show the motion pictures. But the others were worth while, and I felt well paid for my part in the even ing's entertainment. But suppose some one in the audi ence had asked Mr. Lancaster to show something else in Oregon than beau tiful scenery and good roads. He would have been much embarrassed. I mention this that you may profit by it. I have no desire to place these beautiful pictures in hiding. But I would amplify them and show the fruit trees laden with their luscious fruitage, this by sections of the coun try which have all contributed their share to make Oregon great. In short, if I were a citizen tax payer of Oregon I would most cer tainly object to the advertising of the state with public, funds, only to catch the tourist. If good roads is your chief asset, then, of course, that Is what should stand out where every one could read it. But what is now attracting me to Oregon is. in addition to the reasons quoted, the great producing qualities of your Oregon soil, the spirit of good roads building now permeating the very atmosphere of your state, the wonderful natural resources of your state, the rail and water trans portation you are so richly endowed with, the wonderful Columbia River, whose basin and waters form the greatest cornucopia of human natural resources the world has ever known. Add to these the splendid material of American citizenry who populate Ore gon, and you have the most desirable community one can wish to live with. Yes. I am cominc to Oregon, in June of this year, and it is my expectation to make it my future, abiding place while on earth. But It is not because I think voup beautiful scenery and Co lumbia River Highway is your chief asset. T will ask the people or ore gon to look at the picture of catching the smelt as shown in The uregoman of April 23. 1917. and selling for 1 cent PltTlRKS LIRE HOMES EE KER and several groups of islands. October 8 I left Manila for Shanghai. China, and arrived the 17th. I had many good times there. We left Shanghai for Ma nila January 6, arriving the 12th of the same month. It was a rather rough trip but it was a speedy one. What I have Just related shows that a'young man has the best chance ever of seeing the world and gaining precious experience. Now why can't a city like Portland, Or., not only be able to boast of her patriotic spirit but of her patriotic action, which goes much further. Now. as the biggest and best naner in voup citv. The Oree-nninn nuu hivo mamma wn ine omcer inai. , should keep on living up to Its standard n,n" '' Orntoii on Better Method of Advertising. ox. xji'i55, mo.. May 1. (To the Editor.) In The Oregonian recently, under the caption, "Use of $45,000 Topic." Dorsey E. Smith has aomethino- good trip, having seen Honolulu, Guam i 1 8ay concerning the expenditure of cape the observation that the peopl of the state of Oregon with an abut dant harvest last year o wheat, po tatoes and onions are now confronted with prices for these articles so stag gering as to cut deeply Into the income of every householder. The question then arises, may not this condition Le repeated with year's crop and the present era of sky high prices be indefinitely maintained? In my judgment such will be the case unless the speculation and gam bling m rood products as now carried on Is stopped by law. Every day we read in the public press as to how much wheat has risen on the Chicago Board of Trade, and as a consequence how much the price of wheat and flour will be advanced here. This news is generally supplemented by some flimsy reason for the cause of the ad vance. The truth is this Board of Trade is merely the clearing-house for the big gamblers in wheat and other food products. Congress should at once and without a moment's delay make it a crime for anyone to deal In futures with respect to food products. This one remedy alone would put such a crimp in the gambling fraternity that the price of wheat and flour would go toward the level of legitimate prices, in accordance wita the law of supply and demand. Let no one be deceived into tho be lief that the present era of high prices Is wholly due to this so-called, law of supply and demand, because, added to that, must be put "speculation," which knows no law except the law of the highwayman. Within 300 miles of Portland are millions of bushels of wheat, nearly all of it in the hands of millers and exporters, the great bulk of it pur chased at one-half what Is now charged for It, and we are complacently told that the price of wheat is likely to go to $4 a bushel. Of course. If It does. a pound, and then think of our paying ,20 a barrel. Now" V";!" 25 cent, a pound for tne same sme.t tnat tne roreKolnfr phc w,n obtaili th.k th.nt The Oregonian for " the. rogues who are in possession of this picture, for it has only made nie Jf wheat are not restrained from put think Just that much more of Oregon. n -It there And they will not b, M. F. DOUD. GETTYSBURG FIELD VISITED her boy Is needed to help produce food for the soldiers. In the hope of avoid ing the risk of active duty at the front. The widespread movement to plant every available acre of cleared land to crop is a laudable and important one, and the back-yard gardener will doubt less prove an asset to the country of very great value. But there Is al ways danger of growing , hysterical through undue concentration upon any fixed idea. Some v persons are begin ning to think that the only ones who count in our effort to win the war are the soldiers, the farmers, the ship builders and the munition makers. It Is important to bear in mind that each person has his place In a vast complicated system, and that the with drawal of an excessive proportion of workers from any one branch or de partment of our economic life would so disorganize the whole as to reduce the efficiency of every branch, includ ing the soldiers at the front and the sailors on the sea. For every man in uniform we must have two men on the farm, two in the city, and one on the railroad or steamship. The men in the city who are ren dering services of vital importance in clude not only workers in munitions and shipbuilding factories, but lawyers, doctors, bankers, clerks, salesmen. In surance men, commission men, munici pal employes, plumbers, garbage men. dog catchers, and every other man who performs a useful service. If we are to recruit an Army wholly or chiefly from the cities we will run as much risk of disaster as if we were to recruit it wholly from the farms. We should take one man from each -alk of life except transportation, shipbuilding and munitions . factories; and the women, if necessary, may be relied upon to see that the harvest does not go to waste. There is danger, also, of reducing enlistments by placing an undue em phasis on the importance of work at home and on the farm. We cannot get away from the fact that the fellow and help Uncle Sam get his men. You have got the spirit. Live up to it and help the U. S. A. retain what she pos sesses, and when this war Is over you will know you did your share. Now I will close this letter, begging to always remain. Yours sincerely GLENN D. OWEN. U. S. S. Galveston, Manila, P. L, Asiatic Station. CHAMPOEG ISSUE IS DISCUSSED Pioneer Thinks Colonel Meek Is Not Entitled to Much Credit. PORTLAND. May 12. (To the Edi tor.) It is rather surprising that anyone should become excited over the moot question as to whether or not Joe Meek really did say "who's for a divide" at the famous meeting at Champoeg on May 2. 1843. Yet this alleged marvelous performance Is ap parently being depended on to send his name "thundering down the ages." It is really a matter of little or no im portance, but if the story is of enough importance to tell It is of enough im portance to dissect, and criticism is Just as proper and legitimate as ful some praise. It is probable that the quiet little talk F. X. Matthieu had with his friend. Lucler, had more to do with the result of the vote on that occasion than any boisterous call for a "divide." T. C. Elliott, of Walla Walla, doubts the "divide" story. There is much to indicate that tt originated with Meek himself. People who read history want facts and they are unwilling that they be ignored to bolster up a romantic story. Meek was a man of some ability and some importance, and rendered some jrood service, but pioneer testimony seems to be unanimous that he was much given to romance and to exploit ing his own achievements. Apparently the story first appeared In W. H. Gray's book issued nearly a quarter of a century after the Cham poeg meeting. It was later elaborated in Mrs. Victor's book for which Meek with the knapsack Is the real hero and furnished the material. Thornton re- an appropriation made by your Oregon legislature, and. among other thincrn. says: "It is far better to get friendly with the men who sell the tickets to me tourists man to establish an in dependent office in some Eastern city." He also mentions keeping the Ber-ger-Jones. the Lancaster and the Klser pictures busy In the East. Well. I have no right even to sug gest how a single dollar of the appro priation mentioned shall or shall not be expended. I am only speaking of that which will attract me and will Judge others by myself. I became interested in Oregon through personal acquaintances and personal friends. William McMurray, of the Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation Company, has done much to attract me to Oregon, not by getting friendly with his ticket-sellers, but by sending me truckloads of the fine booklets published of that country. In which, by the liberal use of the camera, actual results have been Il lustrated. These booklets have been the best investment for Oregon that you have ever sent to the East. Another potent thing which has interested me has been The Oregonian. Having first had my attention called to that state by the beautiful booklets. I found out The Oregonian and the great fund of In formation contained in every Issue that I have read has only intensified my desire to become a resident of Oregon. Then, again, some 20 years since ray father's oldest brother moved to Ore gon and became quite well to do rais ing peaches. And a word here may be of interest to your readers in Oregon. One of our great railroads here was liberal with illustrated circulars of the peach orchards of Southeastern Mis souri saying that these trees sold for from $1 to $3 for the fruit nearly every year. One of these circulars was handed to me the day I received a let ter from my uncle In Oregon, and I read It to my friend. My uncle had told his crop at $20 per tree. Nor would I wish to belittle the Lancaster pictures. Lancaster was here and showed his pictures to our St. Louis Advertising Club, and I thought well enough of them to Invite Mr. Lan caster to show them in our beautiful Soldan High School auditorium. The Hme was so short that after I had ob tained the use of the auditorium, the superintendent having dismissed a night school for the purpose, on my recommendations of the pictures as an educational feature. I had 300 letters gotten out at my personal expense and mailed out. finishing the work at mid night. The auditorium, was filled, about 4000 being present. The time was so limited that Mr. Lancaster did not get a moving- picture machine so Portland Man Recounts Beauties an Interesting Points at Battle Scene. PORTLAND. May 12. (To the Edi tor.) One of the most interesting points in this country for the tourist, whether soldier or citizen, to visit, is the Gettysburg National Park, where on Julv 1. 2 and 3. 1863. was fought one of the greatest battles of the Civil War. Here about 91.000 Union soldiers anu about the same number in the Confed erate army were engaged in aeaaiy conflict; 23.000 Union Soldiers were killed and a larger number ot confed erates, making In all about &0.000. ana many thousands were wounded. The monuments, hundreds of them. Including magnificent statues of the commanding General. Meade; the fine equestrian statue of General Hancock on Cemetery Hill and one. In the Na tional Cemetery of General Reynolds, and the beautiful and unique designs marking the .locations of the various regiments, companies, batteries, etc., during the engagement, are all of them of absorbing interest. . Culp's Hill, one of the points on which the Union forces were stationed, is circular in form. Here our men en trenched themselves among and behind the rocks, which proved good natural fortifications, and here our soldiers fought valiantly. At Little Round Top and Big Round Top. where General Warren commanded. Warren's bronze statue occupies a conspicuous place on a. hleh rock overlooking the pictur esque country. The statue is placed at the exact spot where In me ne siooo. with field glasses in hand directing our gallant soldiers. From this high ele vation the wheat field, the peach or chard and the devil's den are seen to irood advantase. and the Blue Moun tain range in the distance looks like a dream, while the valleys and surrouna insr country, the fields and the pros perous little City of Gettysburg and its seminary, near the place where the gal lant General Reynolds fell, all form a most attractive panorama. -On the three mountains tops, where. during this engagement so many noble heroes fell, and where the blood flowed freely, violets, columbines, anemones and mandrakes bloom luxuriantly ana the woods are laden with a wealth of blossoms. New York State has prot ably the largest number, and the most unique and expensive monumental de signs of any of the states. Near the Warren statue on Little Round Top Is a monumental tower of great beauty where one may feast his eyes for hours on the surrounding scenery. On the summit of Culp's Hill and Big Hound Top there are also fine observatories, and many beautiful monuments. One of them erected by the state of Maryland is very unique. It represents a soldier reclining behind the rocks in the act of shooting his rifle. There is also a cluster of trees stand Ing out alone in the valley, which from a distance looks like a little island., and It has often been remarked by old soldiers who visit the spot, that these trees seem to remain almost unchanged although so many years have elapsed since that memorable hand-to-hand contest occurred where the men on both sides fought like tigers and where the tide of battle turned In favor of the Union forces. This place Is called "High Water Mark." Here General Pickett, the rebel general, and his forces were repulsed with great loss. Around this group of trees is an Iron railing and a bronze monument Just outside this railing on which Is a huge book on which are Inscribed the" in cidents of this three days' battle, which was. prior to the war in Europe, one of the greatest in the world s history. This wonderful battlefield, now des ignated as the Gettysburg National Park, covers an area of 25 square miles. and many days may be spent most prof ltably in visiting the various places of interest. Up the hillside and down the valleys one may roam, noting here and there- among the monuments. the breastworks and cannons just as they were located during the engagement and it seems like a horrible dream to recall, amid all this serenity, peace and prosperity, those scenes of carnage. We must not fail to specially men tion "The National Cemetery," where thousands of America's brave sons peacefully sleep in one of the loveliest spots, and where the Gettysburg mon ument stands. It was at the dedication of this cemetery that Edward Everett gave his masterly and eloquent oration and Lincoln spoke those Immortal words to the large company there as sembled. W. L. EVERETT KNOWLES. PRICE MANIPULATION IS FEARED Xrrd Seen for Regulation of Food Mar kets by Government. TILLAMOOK, Or, May 5. (To the tor. The rise in the price of food stuffs in the recent past has been so marked and Is being so keenly felt by all classes of people as to call forth a multitude of ideas and suggestions as to the cause or causes and the rem edies to be applied. Many persons without previous knowledge or experi ence are busily engaged In planning or In getting ready to plant potatoes on city lots and vacant acreage. Active and intelligent forces are at work throughout the state looking to the Increase of various agricultural crops, all of which is Llghly commend able and should be furthered in every possible way, and ret one cannot es- be For restrained by public sentiment. that, they care nothing. I have no doubt that the price ot wheat and flour would go to the figure intimated at once if the interests wanted it to, and I have no doubt they would want to do it except that it would not be good "business." It doesn't hurt so much to cut the dog's tall off a little at a time. It is time that Congress passed the legislation necessary to put an end to the manipu lation of this gang whose trail plainly leads from Portland, Or. tc London, England, via Chicago and New York. Working men. working women, work ing children of whatever trade, calling or occupation, has your compensation been raised in accordance with tt.o price of your bread? Better commence at the other side of the problem and ower these artificial prices than throw any advance in wages which you might get into the hands of food gamblers and speculators. The law limits streetcar fares, rail road fares and freight and tele phone rates. People might get along without telephones, they might walk instead of riding in the streetcars, but they cannot go with out food long. If It Is the policy of the law to regulate and control mat ters of this kind it is certainly vastly more Important that It should regulate and control the price, production and distribution of food. This state should have a department of foods and market with a big. Just and courageous man at the head of it. clothed with sufficient authority to su pervise the distribution of food from the time it leaves the producers' hands until It reaches the consumer. That man would soon find out why one Is obliged to pay $1 for 40 cents worth of food, and what becomes of and who gets the other 60? This Is, indeed, the problem of the hour, "Who gets the 60?" Last year 19.000 tons of food rotted in New York City because the dealers couldn't get what they wanted for it, while people across the block starved. How much is rotting In Portland? Do you say the law of supply and demand gov erns? Not at all. It's the law of "your money or your life." C. E. KINDT. ROAD CONDITIONS SATISFY Writer Thinks Bond Isaae at This Time Is Not Advisable. PHILOMATH, Or.. May 11. (To the Editor.) For three and a half years I have been a resident of Oregon and for the same length of time have been a reader of The Oregonian. The pa per is one of our household necessities, but in spite of the high opinion I have of it I cannot resist the temptation to offer a small remonstrance to your reply to S. B. Cobb's masterly letter concerning the road bond issue in your Monday's paper. The "obvious conclusions" you draw from Mr. Cobb's letter are anything but obvious to me. Why do you infer that Mr. Cobb is opposed to home build ing? I assume he builds homes for the purpose of sale. His traffic is reg ulated by supply and demand just as If the article for sale were any other variety of merchandise, and he wiil be governed accordingly. The user of the home ultimately pays for it. as the road is paid for by those who travel it. The prospective purchaser of the home weighs well his needs and re sources and decides for himself whether his necessity is sufficient to impel him to buy at a time of maximum prices. Is our need for these roads sufficient to justify our paying the excessive costs which would prevail under present conditions? Where are the men to construct them to come from, any way? If the questioner new machinery for Mr. Cobb's plant arises he will decide it In precisely the same manner in which he would have arrived at a de cision before the war. but this by no means indicates that the same conclu sion will be reached. The machinery will cost far more now. Will it pay a profit on this in creased investment? Quite possibly not. Or if it is a replacement, cannot the old machine be overhauled and put in thoroughly serviceable condition at a figure very attractive as compared with the present high cost of the new article? And cannot we continue to maintain and use our existing roads to far better advantage than to plunge In at this time of scarcity of labor and excessive cost of material to build those proposed? I think we can. ELLIS W. HONE YM AN. CONTRACT WITH CHINA PUT UP Suggestion la Made That Laborers Be Sent Back After "V. HOOD RIVER. Or.. May 11. (To the Editor.) In The Oregonian we read that the Stockton. Cal.. Chamber of Commerce Is about to "ask Congress to pass legislation to permit immigra tion of 100,000 Asiatics to harvest Cali fornia's crops." Do you not think it would prove more satisfactory to all concerned. In cluding the labor element of our coun try, for Congress, through the proper channels, to contract with China or Japan for the necessary number of laborers for the war period, say three to five years, at the expiration of which, contract all laborers to be returned to the Orient? Individuals and corpora tions could hire those laborers of the Government. One of the great lessons civilization has learned from the war in Europe is that governments can do about all In dividuals can. W. J. PEDDICORD. Vv